Oh, the original Bad Boy - good looking (meh), excitingly reckless (bloody lunatic), taking what he wants with no excuses (egotistical sociopath), cannot be owned by any one woman (abusive, two-timing prick). That is, depending on if you ask some poor smitten one (or me).
Oh, how I hated guys like that. And I'm confident I was nowhere near alone. Because decent guys have always had to watch some unlucky girl being totally swept off her feet by someone that you knew was going to hurt her and then did.
Luckily, I never cross paths with Bad Boys - or their victims - nowadays. Which is good because going around hating people is never good for anything, really.
Anyway, as the title suggests, in this book we are forced to learn about a Bad Boy. And he's just as infuriating as I would think. This is not the reason for the mere 3 stars, however. Let's begin at the beginning, shall we?
DCI Banks is nearing the end of a long vacation in the US, intended as recreation after some really damaging cases and events. His return is preceded, however, by the report of an old neighbor/friend of his of her daughter (Banks' own daughter Tracy's old friend and current roommate) being in possession of a handgun. Something prompting a reaction that must seem like Kafka to someone, eh, living somewhere where guns are abundant. The outcome is tragic and sets off an unfortunate chain of events.
Robinson writes engaging and suspenseful as always and there are a number of great passages in the book. "Dirty Dick" Burgess plays a minor part again, but is in brilliant shape and delivers a lot. The ending I appreciate very much, not too unrealistic but certainly not bland either. The aftermath too is a good part, not avoiding the complications and darker sides of the characters involved.
So, what's with the star withholding then? Well, really only two odd things that threw me, not in a good way, and which I had troubles overlooking. I won't say they spoiled the story for me, but they certainly brought it down a couple of notches. The first is Banks himself reasoning not only stupidly, but totally out of character at one point, the other is Tracy Banks' strange total loss of cool at one point - her reasoning for some actions (or rather lack of action) rhymes very poorly with her levelheadedness and resourcefulness both before and after. Sits wrong and feels like a means of keeping the story going.
Still a read worthy book - I have yet to come across a bad one in the series - and a recommended read. I thought I'd give the anguished inspector a rest now, but the next one is up there on the shelf and I just have to know what happens to poor Annie!